HY 104 Module 1 Reconstruction
Pinckney B.S. Pinchback
1872-73; First black governor; governor of Mississippi
Bargain of 1877
Basically killed Reconstruction; following Hayes' victory; state control in South and transcontinental railroad in Texas
Reconstruction Act of 1867
Divided South into 5 military districts; government to include black men; had to ratify 14th amendment to be granted entry into the Union; RADICAL RECONSTRUCTION BEGINS
Andrew Johnson
Lincoln's VP & successor; Democratic bent; impeached on grounds that he dismissed Secretary of War Stanton despite Congress' refusal to agree
Enforcement Acts
Prohibited the states from discriminating against voters on the basis of race and gave the fed gov power to supersede the state courts and prosecute violations of law Early 1870s
Alabama Claims
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Carpet Baggers
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Compromise of 1877
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Crédit Mobilier
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Ex parte Milligan
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Greenbackers
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Henry Grady
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Redeemed
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Scalawags
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Seward's Folly
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Sharecroppers
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Tenure of Office Act
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
The Crop-Lien System
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
The Freedman's Bureau
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
Ulysses S. Grant
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
freedmen
Who/What? When? Where? Why?
13th Amendment
Who/What? Amendment that prohibits slavery and involuntary servitude When? December 1865 Where? Why?
14th Amendment
Who/What? Amendment that protects rights of individuals and ensures due process of law When? 1868 Where? Why?
"Restoration"
Who/What? Johnson's Reconstruction plan When? Summer 1865 (Congress was in recess) Where? Why? offered amnesty to Southerners who would take an oath of allegiance
Ku Klux Klan
Who/What? Organization created by white Southern democrats; terrorist group; mainly targeted Republicans and blacks When? Where? Why? an attempt to intimidate blacks and keep them from voting
15th Amendment
Who/What? Prevents states from denying voting privileges based on person's race (but not on their ability to pass literacy tests, etc) When? 1870 Where? Why?
Social Darwinism
Who/What? Theory that individuals who fail do so because of their own weakness or "unfitness" When? Where? Why?
The Lost Cause
Who/What? View adopted by some Southerners that justified the Confederate cause; viewed Confederate soldiers as noble, Christian warriors; Old South was deemed as period of perfect racial harmony. Made racial segregation seem like an easy way to return to the way things were When? term used after the end of the war Where? The South Why? To justify the Confederate cause and effort in the war
Lincoln's Reconstruction Plan
Who/What? any former Confederate state can re-enter the union once ten percent of its voters from the 1860 election had sworn an oath of loyalty to the federal government, held a constitutional convention, and abolished slavery When? Where? Why?
The Radicals
Who/What? believed in racial equality and harsh terms for former Confederates When? Where? Why?
Black Codes
Who/What? laws which denied African-Americans their civil rights, relegated them to second-class citizenship, and empowered white authorities with the tools necessary to keep them subjugated; basically laws/rules that replaced the word "slave" with "negro" and thus placed them under suppression again. When? Where? Why? white fears of black insurrection and the labor control 'problem'
Wade-Davis Bill
Who/What? required that a majority of those who had voted in the 1860 election swear an "Ironclad" oath of loyalty to the federal government prior to reorganizing state government. The bill also denied the franchise to anyone who had supported the Confederacy willingly. Vetoed by Lincoln. When? 1864 Where? Why?
Civil Rights Act of 1866
made freedmen citizens and extended to them federal protection against intimidation and reprisals; vetoed by Johnson; veto overruled by Congress with 2/3 majority; became law